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#11
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 19:17:04 +0100, Paul Terry
wrote: In message , MIG writes According to the London ****e, there will be Oysters on Overground by next May. Whatever one might interpret that to mean, it's all Boris Johnson's idea. Given that virtually all TOCs had already agreed to, or been forced into, this, Boris's only real claim to fame is mastering the art of spin. If they've been forced into it I wonder why he needs to hold a conference before the start of Summer? I'd really like to know just who is and who is not signed up to accept Oyster. Anyone know the state of play? I'd also like to know what the terms of each agreement is and whether there is any consistency of treatment or whether the most "awkward" have extracted a better deal. I look forward to the new "transparent" City Hall revealing all. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#12
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On 12 May, 22:16, Paul Corfield wrote:
I'd really like to know just who is and who is not signed up to accept Oyster. Anyone know the state of play? They all promised a "positive response" to the Mayor's offer of free equipment installation a year or two ago, with details to be worked out later in time for a January 2009 rollout. This hasn't happened, as far as I know. Of the 10 London operators: c2c: All services Chiltern: All services London Overground: All services London Midland: All services National Express East Anglia: All trains south of the Victoria Line interchanges, no word on future expansion First Great Western: All services from September, possibly as penance for being rubbish First Capital Connect: Central area services only, no word on future expansion Southern: Watford to Clapham Junction only, no word beyond that Southeastern: None, though they do mention the January 2009 date on their website South West Trains: Franchise agreement alleged to require a full rollout in January 2009, though we'll see. Currently nothing. (Heathrow Connect is sort of an FGW service) U -- http://londonconnections.blogspot.com/ A blog about transport projects in London |
#13
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Paul Scott wrote:
"Mr Thant" wrote in message ... On 12 May, 18:49, MIG wrote: According to the London ****e, there will be Oysters on Overground by next May. Evening Standard/London Lite article: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standa...May/article.do Yet again a London paper uses the term 'overground' confusingly, as the 'Overground' has been Oyster enabled since November. They also refer to the 'overland network' - another new term. There is an argument that it is TfL et al who are using "overground" confusingly, by giving Overground a tighter meaning than (the person in the street's use of-) overground. Maybe it is to compensate for "Tube" now including things which aren't tubes :-) Then there is the Overground Network, which came, caused a little confusion and then died, but its ghost still haunts various bits of signage. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#14
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Paul Scott wrote:
Yet again a London paper uses the term 'overground' confusingly, as the 'Overground' has been Oyster enabled since November. Moreover, Overground didn't exist as such before November and was Oyster enabled from the outset. Also it was the OP that confusingly capitalised the term, not the paper. ESB |
#15
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On May 12, 8:49*pm, "Paul Scott"
wrote: "Mr Thant" wrote in message ... On 12 May, 18:49, MIG wrote: According to the London ****e, there will be Oysters on Overground by next May. Evening Standard/London Lite article: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standa...-details/Boris... Yet again a London paper uses the term 'overground' confusingly, as the 'Overground' has been Oyster enabled since November. They also refer to the 'overland network' - another new term. I am sure that the papers (and everyone) were using the term "overground" long before TfL started using it confusingly. But it was amusing that those papers today used the word which now refers to precisely the part of the railway network that already accepts Pay As You Go. You'd think that for a story like this they'd choose their words more carefully (no you wouldn't). The original press release very carefully doesn't actually make any claims, but makes the announcements in a way that leads readers to make inferences. The papers that have been Boris's campaign leaflets till recently have obligingly spelled out the inferences as facts (ie they have lied). But they've also published a couple of comments on the story from readers pointing out how old the plans are. All very strange. Is it convincing anybody or is it making everyone look silly? What might be preventing TfL spokespeople from explaining the true situation about the current state and history of negotiations with the various TOCs? Because I would be interested to know. |
#16
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On May 13, 12:16*am, Ernst S Blofeld
wrote: Paul Scott wrote: Yet again a London paper uses the term 'overground' confusingly, as the 'Overground' has been Oyster enabled since November. Moreover, Overground didn't exist as such before November and was Oyster enabled from the outset. Also it was the OP that confusingly capitalised the term, not the paper. I was referring to a headline which happened to be all in capitals, not the story in the link. |
#17
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MIG wrote:
I was referring to a headline which happened to be all in capitals, not the story in the link. Might have been handy to point that out from the outset! As it happens, the story as available online does not capitalise overground even in the headline so there is some hope. ESB |
#18
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On May 13, 1:42*am, Ernst S Blofeld
wrote: MIG wrote: I was referring to a headline which happened to be all in capitals, not the story in the link. Might have been handy to point that out from the outset! As it happens, the story as available online does not capitalise overground even in the headline so there is some hope. If punters have to spot a capitalised or non-capitalised version of the same word to make the distinction between totally different railway routes, it demonstrates the silliness of the name. From the version all in capitals it would be anyone's guess anyway. I was trying to ... efficiently? ... poetically? ... have a go at political spin and silly franchise names in one hit. |
#19
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On May 13, 1:42*am, Ernst S Blofeld
wrote: MIG wrote: I was referring to a headline which happened to be all in capitals, not the story in the link. Might have been handy to point that out from the outset! As it happens, the story as available online does not capitalise overground even in the headline so there is some hope. I note that the Google archive claims that I changed the discussion heading (to include a capital?). I certainly did not. I put a capital in the original heading only, because it was a heading, and have never changed it since. |
#20
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 15:02:10 -0700 (PDT), Mr Thant
wrote: (Heathrow Connect is sort of an FGW service) ....which will presumably only accept PAYG as far as H&H. |
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